2. 1. Define nuclear fission, chain reaction, and nuclear
fusion, and distinguish between them.
2. Explain how a fission reaction is used to generate
power.
3. Discuss the possible benefits and the current
difficulty of controlling fusion reactions.
3. • In nuclear fission, a very heavy nucleus splits into
more-stable nuclei of intermediate mass.
• Enormous amounts of energy are released.
• Nuclear fission can occur spontaneously or when
nuclei are bombarded by particles.
4. • A chain reaction is a reaction in which the material
that starts the reaction is also one of the products and
can start another reaction.
• The minimum amount of nuclide that provides the
number of neutrons needed to sustain a chain
reaction is called the critical mass.
• Nuclear reactors use controlled-fission chain
reactions to produce energy and radioactive nuclides.
6. • Nuclear power plants use energy as heat from nuclear reactors to
produce electrical energy.
• They have five main components: shielding, fuel, control rods,
moderator, and coolant.
1. Shielding is radiation-absorbing material that is used to
decrease exposure to radiation, especially gamma rays, from
nuclear reactors.
2. Uranium-235 is typically used as the fissile fuel.
3. The coolant absorbs the energy as heat that is produced
4. Control rods are neutron-absorbing rods that help control
the reaction by limiting the number of free neutrons
5. A moderator is used to slow down the fast neutrons
produced by fission.
8. • In nuclear fusion, low-mass nuclei combine to form a
heavier, more stable nucleus.
• Nuclear fusion releases even more energy per gram of
fuel than nuclear fission.
• If fusion reactions can be controlled, they could be used
for energy generation.